Since 1986, Woolhandler and Himmelstein, alone or with others, have written a series of articles that follow a simple template. In them, the authors measure the administrative costs of the U.S. and Canadian health care systems, subtract the second from the first, and note the difference. This issue of the Journal contains another article in the series. The authors report that the difference between the United States and Canada in outlays for health care administration seems to be increasing. Others have provided alternative estimates of administrative costs in the United States and elsewhere. This literature has been motivated, in part, by speculation that the savings in administrative costs from switching to a single-payer system without cost sharing could pay for the added health care services that would result under a national health insurance system.

In reviewing this literature, an economist is struck by how hard it is to identify and estimate administrative costs accurately at a single point in time in a single nation, how doubly hard it is to compare costs at a single point in time among nations, and how triply hard it is to make meaningful international comparisons of trends in administrative costs over time. All estimates depend on assumptions about which costs are purely administrative and how much of the costs of multipurpose functions should be allocated to administration. Accurate international comparisons must also account for differences among accounting conventions and institutional arrangements. In addition, international comparisons over time must deal with shifting exchange rates and divergent trends in relative wages. As a practical matter, the conditions for accurate comparison have proven impossible to satisfy.

Against this background, three questions arise. First, do administrative costs in the United States exceed those in Canada by about as much as Woolhandler and colleagues say? Second, would the difference in administrative costs really pay for the added services induced by universal coverage with no cost sharing? Third and, I think, most important, what is the significance of the answers to the first two questions in terms of policy?